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ANCIENT ORIGINS
GYMNASTS
BOUNCE INTO THE 21ST CENTURY
Gymnastics, one of those few
sports that can claim a classical birth, is not
what it was in ancient times. For a start, the
athletes no longer perform naked as they did at
the Olympiad of old, "gymnos" being the Greek
word for "naked".
Secondly, to go by monosyllabic
comments made at post-victory press conferences,
there appears to be little left to remind us
of the original purpose of the sport; the Greeks
believed that symmetry of mind and body was
possible only when the physical was balanced
by the intellectual. Then there's the fact that
trampolining will bounce the sport into the
21st century in Sydney.
The gymnasium of ancient
Greece, where the sport was born, was a place
of cultural, artistic, musical and philosophical
well-being, and gymnastics was an activity advocated
by various luminaries, including Plato, Aristotle
and Homer, though the Greeks were not alone
in the gym in those early days. The sport was
also used for training soldiers in China, India
and Persia.
However, the fear of Roman
Emperor Theodosius I in 393AD that the stars
of the Games were rivals to his immortal status
led to gymnastics being banned. It was not until
street acts became popular in the 1700s that
gymnastics became popular once more as writers
and intellectuals revisited the themes explored
by the ancient Greeks.
The sport then branched
out into the two factions, the rigid purpose
of the military and the more artistic purpose
beyond soldiering, which gave rise to "artistic
gymnastics" in the early 19th century and led
to the first "modern" gymnastics competitions
in the latter part of that century. The sport
was very popular in Russia, where the likes
of playwright Anton Chekhov and other social
reformers formed the Russian Gymnastic Federation
in 1883.
Gymnastics at the Games
has a long history of producing multi-medal
winners and minute women of 18
going on 12. Among the most famous have been
Larysa Latynina, one of only
three women in Games history along with Dawn Fraser and Krisztina Egerszegi, the swimmers, to win the
same title at three successive Games, the tiny
Olga Korbut and Nadia Comaneci, of Romania, who
in Montreal in 1976 scored a perfect 20 (requiring
a 10 from every judge) in the asymmetrical bars.
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